while wakefield’s data-distorted study was eventually retracted, “the wakefield zombie marches on,” caulfield wrote. “those pushing a particular agenda keep the study in the public eye,” he said, and the retraction, paradoxically, makes the study seem even more legitimate, because “it fits into the broader anti-vaccine idea, that wakefield was persecuted for bravely speaking the truth.
“the fake science imparts science-y credibility, while the retraction feeds a fake narrative. zombies are hard to kill,” caulfield wrote.
vaccine skepticism didn’t originate with wakefield, he and others said. “vaccine hesitancy and resistance has a long history in canada,” carstairs and her co-author, master’s student kathryn hughes, wrote in their paper published in canadian historical review. a national anti-vaccine league formed in 1900 in opposition to compulsory smallpox shots. the modern-day anti-vax movement began in the 1980s, carstairs and hughes wrote, led by a “small number of people with alternative understandings of health and medicine, and by parents who believe their children were harmed by vaccination.”
“a lot of parental concern is really about the number of overall vaccines that children are receiving these days,” said carstairs, who grew up in the 70s and 80s. the number of vaccines since “has really escalated, which, as a pro-vaccination person, i think is great,” she said in an interview with national post.